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Federal
Hall New York
Location: 26 Wall St., New York
The address at 26 Wall Street was the site of New York
City's 18th century City Hall. Here John Peter Zenger was jailed, tried, and acquitted
of libel for exposing government corruption in his newspaper, an early victory for
freedom of the press. City Hall hosted the Stamp Act Congress, which assembled in
October 1765, to protest "taxation without representation."
After the American Revolution, the Continental Congress
met at City Hall, and in 1787 adopted the Northwest Ordinance establishing procedures
for creating new states. When the Constitution was ratified in 1788, New York remained
the national capital. Pierre L'Enfant was commissioned to remodel City Hall for
the new federal government. The First Congress met in the new Federal Hall, and
wrote the Bill of Rights, and George Washington was inaugurated here as President
on April 30, 1789.
When the capital moved to Philadelphia in 1790, the building
again housed city government until 1812, at which time Federal Hall was demolished.
The current structure on the site was built as the Customs House, opening in 1842.
In 1862, Customs moved to 55 Wall Street and the building became the U. S. Sub-Treasury.
Millions of dollars of gold and silver were kept in the basement vaults until the
Federal Reserve Bank replaced the Sub-Treasury system in 1920.
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